Don and Linda have given their permission for us to tell you about UNICEF's
Change for Good program.

Would you like to do some good in the world at virtually no cost?

Change for GoodŽ (CFG) is a partnership between international air carriers
and UNICEF, the United Nations Children's Fund. CFG is designed to redeem
normally unused foreign currency by converting passengers' foreign change
into lifesaving materials and services for the world's neediest children.
This partnership has raised over US$27 million over the last ten years.

Most of us return from our trips with an assortment of coins rattling
around our pockets and luggage: rappen, francs, lire. Yes, we made sure
to stop at the exchange office at the airport on the way home and turn
in our banknotes for US dollars. But how many coins do we have left? And
what will we do with them?

If you're like most of us you'll clean out your pockets and bags when
you get home and dump the change into a drawer. The odds are good the
coins will still be there when your traveling days are ended. Benefiting
no one.

More than a dozen airlines will ask their passengers returning to the
US if they'd like to turn over their coins to benefit CFG. Please, do
this if you're invited to participate. You can be assured that funds collected
will be transferred to UNICEF.

If your airline does not participate, or if you missed the opportunity
earlier, you may send your spare foreign coins (and banknotes) to:

(That's the foreign exchange shop at the International Arrivals Terminal
if you happen to be at the airport.)

If you're traveling to Europe in 2001:
Euro coins and banknotes will replace all present national currencies
in twelve European countries at the beginning of 2002. Those lire, francs
and schillings you've saved won't be usable by, or before, the middle
of 2002. Make them useful by giving them to CFG. Yes, probably you'll
be able to turn them in for euros, through a bureaucratic process, when
you return to Europe. But we've always found exchanging outdated currency
in Europe, which has happened a lot, takes so long that most visitors
are stuck with the old money. Don't let your money go to waste ... use
it to help kids now.